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Your View: Why criticisms of Christopher Columbus are unfair

  • Christopher Columbus statue is depicted. The bronze statue was dedicated...

    April Gamiz/The Morning Call

    Christopher Columbus statue is depicted. The bronze statue was dedicated on December 14, 1930 then re-dedicated on Oct 12, 1992. It can be seen from Larry Holmes Drive located at Riverside Park in Easton.

  • Christopher Columbus statue is depicted. The bronze statue was dedicated...

    April Gamiz/The Morning Call

    Christopher Columbus statue is depicted. The bronze statue was dedicated on December 14, 1930 then re-dedicated on Oct 12, 1992. It can be seen from Larry Holmes Drive located at Riverside Park in Easton.

  • Christopher Columbus statue is depicted. The bronze statue was dedicated...

    April Gamiz/The Morning Call

    Christopher Columbus statue is depicted. The bronze statue was dedicated on December 14, 1930 then re-dedicated on Oct 12, 1992. It can be seen from Larry Holmes Drive located at Riverside Park in Easton.

  • Christopher Columbus statue is depicted. The bronze statue was dedicated...

    April Gamiz/The Morning Call

    Christopher Columbus statue is depicted. The bronze statue was dedicated on December 14, 1930 then re-dedicated on Oct 12, 1992. It can be seen from Larry Holmes Drive located at Riverside Park in Easton.

  • Christopher Columbus statue is depicted. The bronze statue was dedicated...

    April Gamiz/The Morning Call

    Christopher Columbus statue is depicted. The bronze statue was dedicated on December 14, 1930 then re-dedicated on Oct 12, 1992. It can be seen from Larry Holmes Drive located at Riverside Park in Easton.

  • Christopher Columbus statue is depicted. The bronze statue was dedicated...

    April Gamiz/The Morning Call

    Christopher Columbus statue is depicted. The bronze statue was dedicated on December 14, 1930 then re-dedicated on Oct 12, 1992. It can be seen from Larry Holmes Drive located at Riverside Park in Easton.

  • Christopher Columbus statue is depicted. The bronze statue was dedicated...

    April Gamiz/The Morning Call

    Christopher Columbus statue is depicted. The bronze statue was dedicated on December 14, 1930 then re-dedicated on Oct 12, 1992. It can be seen from Larry Holmes Drive located at Riverside Park in Easton.

  • Christopher Columbus statue is depicted. The bronze statue was dedicated...

    April Gamiz/The Morning Call

    Christopher Columbus statue is depicted. The bronze statue was dedicated on December 14, 1930 then re-dedicated on Oct 12, 1992. It can be seen from Larry Holmes Drive located at Riverside Park in Easton.

  • Christopher Columbus statue is depicted. The bronze statue was dedicated...

    April Gamiz/The Morning Call

    Christopher Columbus statue is depicted. The bronze statue was dedicated on December 14, 1930 then re-dedicated on Oct 12, 1992. It can be seen from Larry Holmes Drive located at Riverside Park in Easton.

  • Christopher Columbus statue is depicted. The bronze statue was dedicated...

    April Gamiz/The Morning Call

    Christopher Columbus statue is depicted. The bronze statue was dedicated on December 14, 1930 then re-dedicated on Oct 12, 1992. It can be seen from Larry Holmes Drive located at Riverside Park in Easton.

  • Christopher Columbus statue is depicted. The bronze statue was dedicated...

    April Gamiz/The Morning Call

    Christopher Columbus statue is depicted. The bronze statue was dedicated on December 14, 1930 then re-dedicated on Oct 12, 1992. It can be seen from Larry Holmes Drive located at Riverside Park in Easton.

  • Christopher Columbus statue is depicted. The bronze statue was dedicated...

    April Gamiz/The Morning Call

    Christopher Columbus statue is depicted. The bronze statue was dedicated on December 14, 1930 then re-dedicated on Oct 12, 1992. It can be seen from Larry Holmes Drive located at Riverside Park in Easton.

  • Christopher Columbus statue is depicted. The bronze statue was dedicated...

    April Gamiz/The Morning Call

    Christopher Columbus statue is depicted. The bronze statue was dedicated on December 14, 1930 then re-dedicated on Oct 12, 1992. It can be seen from Larry Holmes Drive located at Riverside Park in Easton.

  • Christopher Columbus statue is depicted. The bronze statue was dedicated...

    April Gamiz/The Morning Call

    Christopher Columbus statue is depicted. The bronze statue was dedicated on December 14, 1930 then re-dedicated on Oct 12, 1992. It can be seen from Larry Holmes Drive located at Riverside Park in Easton.

  • Christopher Columbus statue is depicted. The bronze statue was dedicated...

    April Gamiz/The Morning Call

    Christopher Columbus statue is depicted. The bronze statue was dedicated on December 14, 1930 then re-dedicated on Oct 12, 1992. It can be seen from Larry Holmes Drive located at Riverside Park in Easton.

  • Christopher Columbus statue is depicted. The bronze statue was dedicated...

    April Gamiz/The Morning Call

    Christopher Columbus statue is depicted. The bronze statue was dedicated on December 14, 1930 then re-dedicated on Oct 12, 1992. It can be seen from Larry Holmes Drive located at Riverside Park in Easton.

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The Commission for Social Justice is the anti-defamation arm of the Order Sons and Daughters of Italy in America. The commission has, throughout the years, engaged in a wide variety of activities geared towards accomplishing its twin goals of promoting a positive image of Italian Americans and maintaining a strong conviction in fighting bias, bigotry and defamation.

The Commission for Social Justice is woefully attuned to the groundswell sweeping our country regarding the removal/relocation of Christopher Columbus statues and monuments. We find the tone of professor Allison Mickel’s July 11 Your View commentary “Columbus is still killing people” inflammatory and hateful.

Professor Mickel is obviously among those who rebuke and dismiss the extraordinary accomplishments of Christopher Columbus and choose to promote a negative, false and deceptive commentary with accusations of opportunism, ruthlessness, greed, cruelty, violence and an all-consuming thirst for glory.

These individuals would have people believe that every act of inhumanity and cruelty throughout the history of our nation began with Christopher Columbus, and the ills of mankind should rest squarely on his shoulders. This deception serves to undermine his reputation.

Robert Ferrito
Robert Ferrito

The Commission for Social Justice is determined to let our collective voices be heard with respect to the removal/relocation of statues and monuments dedicated to the memory of Christopher Columbus.

The arrival of Columbus in 1492 marked the start of recorded history in the Americas and the beginning of a cultural exchange between America and Europe. After Columbus, millions of European immigrants brought their art, music, science, medicine, philosophy and religious principles to America.

The creation of statues and monuments in the likeness of Columbus commemorate the arrival on these shores of Italian immigrants, with more than 4 million arriving between 1880 and 1925. Today, the children and grandchildren of those early Italian Americans constitute the nation’s fifth-largest ethnic group. Italian Americans were declared a protected minority by Federal Judge Constance Motley Baker in a lawsuit brought against the City University of New York State (Scelsa v. CUNY).

Professor Mickel questioned “if Columbus were in fact worthy of admiration.” The answer is a resounding and unequivocal yes.

Christopher Columbus accomplished extraordinary things during his life.

* Columbus proved that it was possible to safely cross the Atlantic.

* Columbus was the first European to realize the full importance of the Atlantic wind pattern called the prevailing Westerlies, which blew steadily east.

* Columbus’s transatlantic route lay the foundation for future navigation in the region. His maps were used by Amerigo Vespucci (the Italian explorer for whom America is named).

* The route across the Atlantic Ocean that Columbus charted in the 15th century is still used by sailors today.

* Columbus introduced the principles of compass variation (the variation at any point of the Earth’s surface between the magnetic north and true north).

* Columbus’s voyages marked the end of thousands of years of isolation between the Western Hemisphere and the rest of the world.

An examination of the historical record shows he was not guilty of many of the things his modern detractors claim:

* Columbus was not a slave trader. He never owned slaves, nor did he bring any slaves to the Western Hemisphere from Africa.

Columbus found slavery practiced in the Caribbean by the Caribs/Canibs, who made slaves of the tribes they conquered and may have tortured and eaten their victims. The Spanish arrival in the New World was the decisive factor that eventually ended human sacrifice and cannibalism.

* Columbus and other Europeans brought with them Old World agricultural techniques, including crop rotation and animal breeding. They introduced new tools (including the wheel) as well as new plants and domesticated animals, including the horse.

* Columbus was not a racist. No evidence indicates that Columbus thought the islanders he met were racially inferior in any way. In the journal of his first voyage, Columbus praised their generosity, innocence and intelligence, according to “Columbus and the Quest for Jerusalem” by Carol Delaney.

* Columbus did not commit genocide. No one knows exactly how many people were in the Western Hemisphere when the Europeans arrived. Many researchers believe the number to be around 40 million. Columbus made four voyages to the Caribbean in a 12-year period (1492-1504), spending from only seven months to two years and nine months (including the year he was shipwrecked on his fourth voyage). While there was armed conflict with the Spanish who came with Columbus and stayed after he left, there is no evidence of the kind of mass slaughter that was practiced later in Central and South America.

New medical research on pre-Columbian mummies in Peru, Chile and remote areas far from the early European colonies reveals tuberculosis, long thought European in origin, was present among the Native American tribes before the arrival of Columbus.

The Commission for Social Justice remains determined to continue the preservation of the memory of Christopher Columbus and the significant part he played in the history of the Americas.

To Italian Americans, statues and monuments erected in memory of Christopher Columbus represent not only the accomplishments and contributions of Italian Americans, but also the indelible spirit of risk, sacrifice and self-reliance of a great Italian icon.

Robert Ferrito is national president of the Commission for Social Justice arm of the Order Sons and Daughters of Italy in America.